Biographies 2026
Keynote Speaker: Zoryana Pshyk

Zoryana Pshyk
Zoryana Pshyk is an adult educator, facilitator, researcher, and community practitioner. Zoryana was born in Ukraine and has been living in Ireland for the past twenty years and holds both citizenships. Her work is grounded in the belief that education can become a space where people reclaim their voice, dignity, agency, and the possibility of acting together to change the world. Drawing from her own lived experience of migration and her experience of the Irish direct provision system, alongside years of working with asylum seekers, refugees, and marginalised communities, her practice explores how we as educators can help people to unlearn oppression, and move beyond systems of survival, and towards solidarity and collective transformation. Find out more here
Speaker

Niall Tierney
Niall Tierney has been the Director of the Global Programmes Unit within Ireland’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade since September 2023. That Unit supports Ireland’s cooperation programming in S/E Asia, Central America, Colombia, SIDS, Palestine and Jordan, as well as the Ireland Fellowship Programme and the Global Citizenship Education programme. Previously, Niall was seconded to the UN Resident Coordinator Office in Mozambique in support of the national responses to the Covid19 pandemic and conflict in northern Mozambique. He also served as Head of Ireland’s Cooperation in Mozambique; Deputy Head of Cooperation in Ethiopia and was Ireland’s negotiator to the SDGs 2013-2015. Prior to joining the Department of Foreign Affairs in 2013, Niall served as Country Director and in other roles for Concern Worldwide in West and Southern African Countries for 13 years.
Love and Radical Hope-an Audience with Sally Hayden

Sally Hayden
Sally Hayden is an award-winning journalist, photographer and author.
She has worked with VICE, VICE News, CNN International, the Financial Times Magazine, TIME, the Thomson Reuters Foundation, BBC, the Washington Post, the Irish Times, the Guardian, the New York Times, Magnum Photos, Channel 4 News, Foreign Policy, Al Jazeera, NBC News, Maclean’s, the Sunday Times, Newsweek, RTE, ELLE, Marie Claire, Die Zeit, Voice of America, the Independent, the Telegraph, Deutsche Welle, IRIN, the New Statesman, the New Internationalist, the National, the TLS, the Huffington Post and ITV News, and had stories and/or photojournalism republished on six continents by outlets including Pacific Standard, National Geographic, NPR, the Wall Street Journal, the Times of India, Euronews, the Christian Science Monitor, Sky News, Der Spiegel, the Observer, the Globe and Mail, ABC News, Forbes, the Economist and TeleSUR English, among many others.
Panel Conversation: Voices for Liberation - Perspectives on Education in an Age of Crisis
Fahmeda Naheed
Fahmeda Naheed is a multiple-award-winning community development leader, researcher, and intercultural facilitator with over fifteen years of voluntary and civic engagement in Cork and across Ireland. Her work spans community organising, radio broadcasting, intercultural dialogue, anti-racism advocacy, activism, training, and writing. She is the founder of the Irish Pakistani Community of Cork, an initiative that promotes community cohesion, supports underrepresented groups, interfaith dialogue, and builds cultural bridges through shared projects and events, including tutoring and fusion cooking (Irish Pakistani Food Fusion). As a doctoral researcher with DCU, Fahmeda explores anti-racism education through the lens of community education, contributing to national debates on identity, migration, and the shifting landscape of Irish multiculturalism. She believes strongly in the power of community spaces, and often uses community cooking initiatives as a way to connect people, share culture, and spark dialogue. Recognised locally and nationally for her civic impact, Fahmeda embodies courage, compassion, and collective responsibility—amplifying marginalised voices and fostering solidarity across communities. Fahmeda Naheed exemplifies active citizenship and positive social change through her extensive voluntary work, lived experiences, leadership, and advocacy in Cork and across Ireland.
John Magee
John Magee has worked in post-primary education since 1993. He has taught in England and spent twelve months teaching in Uganda. Since 2003, he has served as Chaplain at Millstreet Community School, Co. Cork. Providing opportunities for students to engage with global justice issues has always been central to his work. John first connected with WorldWise Global Schools (WWGS) in 2014, and its support has been integral to the school's Global Citizenship Education (GCE) initiatives ever since. One of the highlights of this work has been the annual Language and Culture Week. Drawing on Paulo Freire's concept of praxis, John believes that students should not only learn about global issues but also think critically about them and be empowered to take meaningful action.
Macarena Montero
Macarena serves as GCE Officer at Educate Together, where she leads work on embedding student-led activism across primary schools. Originally from Chile, she brings decolonial thinking, a background in community development, and experience in popular education. Her practice is grounded in collective action and a firm belief in education as a transformational force for justice.
Talha AlAli
Talha AlAli, MSc, MA, is a Palestinian psychotherapist, author, human rights activist, educator and the founder of Decolonised Minds, a platform dedicated to culturally grounded and politically conscious approaches to mental health. Based in Ireland, he currently maintains a private practice while also serving as a psychotherapist with the Irish Red Cross, supporting Arabic-speaking survivors of torture and war trauma. Talha integrates trauma-informed, culturally responsive, and justice-oriented practice into his work. His book, Decolonised Minds: When Radical Becomes Rational, offers a framework for reimagining psychotherapy through decolonial and liberation psychology perspectives. A member of the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI) and a member of the Irish Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (IACP), Talha brings nearly two decades of clinical and humanitarian experience to his work. Prior to his current roles, he worked extensively with Doctors Without Borders (MSF) across several missions.
Guest Musicians and Artists

Aziz Abushark
Aziz Abushark is a Palestinian musician who blends traditional Palestinian influences with contemporary sounds, using music as a form of storytelling inspired by his father, Asad Abushark. He has been playing his instrument for over 17 years and has performed both locally and internationally. A Computer Science graduate of Trinity College Dublin and currently pursuing an MSc in Cybersecurity at University College Dublin, Aziz also co-founded Young Minds, an educational coding academy, which equips students aged 7-18 with coding, and cyber safety skills through engaging, project-based learning, helping them build confidence and future-ready digital skills.

Nomalanga Zulu and Neo Florence Gilson
Nomalanga Zulu and Neo Florence Gilson are socially engaged artists and members of African Queens. Through music, storytelling and performance, they create opportunities for intercultural dialogue, community connection and learning, drawing on African artistic traditions as tools for empowerment and social change.

Nima Ashour
Nima Ashour is a teacher from Gaza, where she worked with UNRWA. She
recently evacuated to Ireland, where she is now an adult educator with the City
of Dublin’s YES Project. Nima is also an MSc student in Equality Studies at
UCD, and a previous Student Partner in Teaching and Learning Unit at UCD.
Her academic work centres on gender equality, decolonial feminism, education,
and Palestinian women’s experiences.
Facilitators: Workshop Sessions

Daniela Jiménez-Montero
Daniela Jiménez-Montero is a feminist economist originally from Costa Rica, with experience in social research, public policy, and international cooperation across Europe and Latin America. She holds degrees in Development Economics from the National University of Costa Rica and in Gender, Politics and International Relations from University College Dublin. Daniela currently works as Community Engagement and Legal Information Officer at Africa Solidarity Centre Ireland (Africa Centre), a national organisation that supports migrants, refugees, and people seeking international protection through community development, legal information, integration initiatives, and advocacy for racial and social justice in Ireland. In her role, she works closely with migrant and African diaspora communities, supporting access to rights, strengthening community participation, and building connections between communities and public institutions. Her work focuses on gender, migration, care systems, and LGBTIQA+ rights through an intersectional lens. Having studied Paulo Freire during her university years, his philosophy has remained a key inspiration in her educational and political approach, particularly within Latin American and African traditions of social justice and liberation.

Ellen Corby
Ellen Corby is the Global Citizenship Education Coordinator with LYCS. She has worked with LYCS since 2023 and coordinates LYCS’ extensive GCE programme, with significant experience in the delivery of participatory arts-based programming. Ellen holds a BA in Drama Studies/Modern Irish from Trinity College Dublin, and an MSc in Global Health majoring in Sexual and Reproductive Health from the Institute of Global Health and Development at Queen Margaret University Edinburgh. She is currently completing a MEd in Adult and Community Education at Maynooth University.

Mica O’Dwyer
Mica O’Dwyer is the Global Citizenship Education Worker with LYCS, having joined the organisation in April 2025. She supports the development and delivery of impactful programmes and community outreach initiatives within the North East Inner City of Dublin. Mica attended University College Dublin and holds a BA in Linguistics with Communication and Information Studies and an MSc in Equality Studies. Her thesis focused on homelessness, exploring the commodification and aestheticisation of poverty in the luxury fashion industry.

Peter Dorman
Peter Dorman has been involved in both community work and with Partners Training for Transformation for forty years. Peter has been active in grassroots community education, organisational development, regeneration, addressing the impact of drug trade on communities and leadership in intercultural community development. Paolo Freire’s work was incorporated into
Training for Transformation A Handbook for Community Workers
by Ann Hope and Sally Timmel in the 1970s which was then taken up by
Partners Training for Transformation as the basis for community leadership in Ireland.

Aleesha Wiegandt
Aleesha Wiegandt has been working in Global Citizenship Education since 2019. She is a creative facilitator, community organiser, activist and multi-disciplinary artist based in Cork, Ireland. She uses data visualisation, movement practices, and graphic harvesting to engage folks in change making. Aleesha is a pleasure activist and passionate about creating third spaces.

Zoe McKenna
Zoe McKenna is a pleasure activist, an artist, musician, youth and community development worker, soon-to-be art therapist and a Global Citizenship Educator from Mayo based in Cork. Like Aleesha, she is a graduate of MTU’s Creativity and Change course class of 2025.

Sive Bresnihan
Based in Leitrim, Sive Bresnihan is a trainer and facilitator in global citizenship education, with a background spanning theatre, human rights, and international development. Until January 2026, she was Training and Education Co-ordinator with Comhlámh, where she spent almost a decade designing and facilitating workshops and learning programmes - including projects such as “E-TICK” and “DEFY” - supporting learners to explore ‘difficult knowledge’ and questions of justice, solidarity and community. Drawing on her roots in applied drama and theatre, Sive has a growing interest in process work and creative, embodied approaches to learning. She recently completed a two-year training in Gestalt Theatre and will begin further training in Gestalt this autumn. She also has extensive training in Theatre of the Oppressed.










